Robbie Crafty Knitter
Robbie Crafty Knitter
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Work in progress - Outlander Shawl (commission)
I've got my first commission work. I am currently putting my best effort into making it as best as possible using the yarn that the client chose. This is a modified form of the Outlander series shawl and will be roughly as long, if not a tad longer. The modified part comes from the fact that I'll end off with a scalloped border or decorated in some form.
Please like and subscribe as that helps smaller channels like mine, and I'll be showing the end product before sending this shawl to the client. I'll also, in the future, demonstrate turning your work 90 degrees to make interesting borders while working on your work.
มุมมอง: 457

วีดีโอ

Don't use Gleener Pill Cleaner on Knitted Fabrics, use this instead...
มุมมอง 1333 ปีที่แล้ว
In this video, I step back from showing how to knit and explain a mistake I made when handling pills on my knitted works. The Gleener Cleaner (also called the Gleener Pill Cleaner) is recommended by many TH-camrs, but it damages knitted and crafted fabrics. It even says in its instruction manual to not use for knitted items. So then, what can you use? I will show how using a simple Pill Stone c...
Mitered Squares and scrubbie yarn and my future plans
มุมมอง 303 ปีที่แล้ว
Sorry I haven’t been posting much in the last week and a half, but I will show in this video what I’ve been up to and how I’ve been progressing on my knitting journey. You will see my finished works in mitered squares and how I’ve created my own pattern for mitered squares and even that I still need to refine the pattern some before uploading/publishing it for everyone to see. I will also menti...
How to do Knit stitch in Continental Lever Knitting tutorial
มุมมอง 2853 ปีที่แล้ว
In this video, we will discuss how to do Continental Lever Knitting’s knit stitch. Knit stitches are generally really easy for many people to understand how to do them. However, in this video I discuss and show how it can be done faster by doing it in Continental Lever Knitting. As with all my videos, please like and subscribe. Thank you.
How to do Continental Lever knitting’s purl stitch tutorial
มุมมอง 4513 ปีที่แล้ว
In this video, I discuss ways to do Continental Lever Knitting’s purl stitch. Purl stitches are hard for people to figure out sometimes, but it isn’t that hard to do in continental lever knitting because the stitches are easily manipulated by the left hand to be achieved. Just as English style lever knitting does with the right hand.
Choosing stitch markers that work with life lines for knitting and knitting tips
มุมมอง 4073 ปีที่แล้ว
This is my second video in a series about how to Knit. In this video, I discuss how to thread a lifeline, what stitch markers are best to use, and why not to use certain stitch markers. This video is designed to give advice and tips to new knitters, and offer a different perspective to veteran knitters. Lightbulb stitch markers are among the best and most sought-after stitch markers and this vi...
How to do Continental Lever Knitting tutorial
มุมมอง 8K3 ปีที่แล้ว
If you ever wanted to do knitting that is both accurate and fast, continental lever knitting is the style for you. In this video, I discuss how to do continental lever knitting, offering advice to new and veteran knitters alike, and showing efficient this knitting style can be. By the time you are finished with this video, you will understand how to knit and create your own items using this met...
Robbie's - Continental Lever Knitting
มุมมอง 3823 ปีที่แล้ว
Continental knitting is a type of knitting style that uses the left hand to tension the yarn, which is helpful for those that are familiar with crocheting. Lever knitting's main premise is to not move the working (right needle) and work as close to the tip as possible while being efficient in your motions. I have adapted these styles together and show this in this video. This adapted style does...
Robbie's Channel Introduction
มุมมอง 1223 ปีที่แล้ว
This video introduces my channel that is based around knitting topics. This channel is for anyone that wants another perspective on knitting and to find ways to do various stitches like Chinese Waves, Seed, Double Seed, and other stitches. I will also include reviews on various knitting products, and updates on my own knitting skills and abilities. Please subscribe, like and share this video an...
How to Picking up stitches and fixing a problem
มุมมอง 1053 ปีที่แล้ว
Ever have lost a needle and need to pick up your stitches, or made a mistake and needed to take back to an earlier part to fix the problem. This video demonstrates the process to take back down to a previous row, slip the stitches over to another needle, re-knit the stitches maintaining previous tension, and introducing continental lever knitting. A future video will go into more detail on cont...

ความคิดเห็น

  • @n.v.b2
    @n.v.b2 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This yarn looks beautiful! Thank you for sharing!

  • @madelaine3209
    @madelaine3209 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Great video. This is the fastest way to knit. But, knit extremely slow when learning for quite a while. Thank you!!

  • @margaretsackton4046
    @margaretsackton4046 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very interesting thanks for the demo. I’ll try this.

  • @pattyfox6907
    @pattyfox6907 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks! My Continental knitting has gotten looser and looser. Your method seems to be working to tighten things up.

  • @grethelbermudez4550
    @grethelbermudez4550 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Amazing! Thank you!!!

  • @meerchat2688
    @meerchat2688 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I came across your video while I was revisiting lever knitting technique. I had given up circ lever because having to keep knitting over the right thumb ended up hurting the said thumb. Your method might well be the answer to my problem. Thank you so much! I hope you are still active here, as I'd love to learn your technique more.

  • @kimberlykelly7280
    @kimberlykelly7280 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is very comfortable for me. Thank you!!😊

  • @VstarrAsh
    @VstarrAsh 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for this very helpful video. I am in the midst of changing my knitting style.

  • @jturnrich
    @jturnrich 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for this video. I switched to knitting this way when I developed trndin problems in my right hand. This method reduces rotation of the right wrist and thumb. The 90° angle of the needles and the lever technique on the purls are key.

  • @kayceegreer4418
    @kayceegreer4418 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Robbie, honey, do you need glasses? That label reads " LI'L DOLLOP". . . But the yarn company put the apostrophe in the wrong place. L - I - apostrophe -L is short for "little". A contraction, just like "we're, isn't, I'd've ( I would have, a double contraction - I've even made some triples )". See, when you leave off a couple of letters in a word, you put in an apostrophe in to replace 'em, showin' that they're not goin' ta be pronounced [see whut I did thər, writin' it the way it was pernounced]? It is a way that has developed in writing to indicate dialectical or colloquial ways of speech more phonetically. A "lotta" people have never seen this written down, so it's a li'l confusing, especially when they put the apostrophe in the wrong place - on a label no less - of a brand name! "Dollop (dol'•ləp)" is a word of chiefly British origin, So, you know it has been around for ages - AND it is also another word many people just have never seen written down. It's pronounced like "doll up". Have you ever seen that commercial for Daisy sour cream, and they sing " ...do, do a dollop, do a dollop of Daisy!"? A "dollop" means an indiscriminate, or unmeasured large glob or amount of a soft food, or even a granular substance, like sugar, that is served up, such as a big ol' plop of sour cream on top of a baked potato, or on top of your chili - if you've never tried it, don't knock it - ooh, now I want chili on a big baked potato with a " LI'L DOLLOP " of Daisy on top! Forget the yarn an' knittin' fer awhile, let's put the feed bag on!

  • @Euterpe65
    @Euterpe65 ปีที่แล้ว

    I get little fuzz balls while I’m knitting--I have two persian cats and some of their fur is always trying to felt in. Thanks for this! I almost got one of these, glad I didn’t pull the trigger. Is that a bath towel? I’ve never thought about making bath towels--until now! I made some wash cloths when I first learned to knit and like them. Oh and as for plant fibers, I like persil laundry detergent because it has cellulase which helps prevent pilling 😊

  • @Danceswithfishes
    @Danceswithfishes ปีที่แล้ว

    This is continental knitting. What makes it "lever"?

  • @connieschoening8555
    @connieschoening8555 ปีที่แล้ว

    thank you im new to this type of knitting and you videos are very clear to undwestand ,, and you give me a chance to take it slow,, some people just go so fast that i have to slow down their video just to see what im suposed to be doing so i apreciate how you teach, THANK YOU

  • @bevwitter4331
    @bevwitter4331 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent video - lovely clear instructions; thank you 😊

  • @lucygoose6052
    @lucygoose6052 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very helpful!

  • @magacuellarmonraz1956
    @magacuellarmonraz1956 ปีที่แล้ว

    TERRIBLE VIDEO QUALITY!!!! :p

    • @hanshi3831
      @hanshi3831 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      TERRIBLE COMMENT QUALITY!!!

  • @adelekrusz6847
    @adelekrusz6847 ปีที่แล้ว

    This method works wonderfully for me! It's faster than throwing and it's a LOT easier, ergonomically, on my shoulders and hands. The yarn is easier to control, too. I love it!

    • @kayceegreer4418
      @kayceegreer4418 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Even though I am a hairdresser and use all of my fingers very well, and am fairly ambidextrous, I would rather throw the ball of yarn back in a bin than throw a yarn strand over a needle. For one thing, I get dyslexic trying to figure out where the yarn needs to be thrown, and which way the sticks need to be crossed. The "two thing", is that with me being a practical and pragmatic person, my brain itself abso-frickin'-lutely and indomitably refuses to do a halting, stop-start motion that ya can never get fast at, soon enough to satisfy my urgent need to want to learn to knit! Lol. Maybe I will try Carrie Craftgeek lever knitting th-cam.com/video/-d_t2l-iois/w-d-xo.htmlsi=-lqIFfOq11B7TJHx it seems to be pretty darn smooth and pretty darn quick. But correct now I am whipping along pretty darn fast with simple knits and purls. Yay for Yarn has a good how to knit faster video I saw a long time ago that impressed me but she was comparing things that I had no clue because I had not even begun to knit yet because I was confused by the many different ways to cast on and they don't even tell you what kind of cast on it is because they don't even know. Every time I looked up a cast-on video to learn how to do it, it was different, and I thought I was going nuts and my memory was leaving me! I am an impatient learner. If I want to do something, I jump in, sink or swim, do or die, determined to make it to the other shore. Don't tell me anything. Quit palaverin' and show me. Lemme get my fingers in it. I am very "monkey see, monkey do". But if I don't see another monkey doin' it, l'll figger it out m'self! After watching about a gazillion knitting vids - not any how to/beginner ones, no - and saving a billion wonderfully beautiful and textured but yet ever so easy to do knitting projects, mostly by Turkish, Russian, some Arabic and other Middle Eastern, ladies going strictly by the tone of skin, or the fact that there is actually Russian, Turkish or Arabic in the title and some with no English whatsoever much less subtitles or even accurate subtitles ( one Turkish video told me to make a three o'clock in the road with tires ), They seem to all be Continental style knitters except for one peculiar way that I have seen is also done by Portuguese, so the limited amount of those that I have seen, have at least learned it by a Portuguese person who intermarried on a trading route or something in distant history... Oh, Boy! did I go and lead you through a rabbit warren or what? Sorrrry.... I have watched, Surely, more than 100,000 knitting videos and very few have been ones that string the yarn around their neck and place the yarn where it needs to go with their thumbs, a rare few have held a very long stick in a holster belt or under their arm and did the English throwing method in what they called lever knitting. This guy is not lever knitting. He is merely showing the advantage of knitting with the sense God gave a goose, in how to hold your needles to get your yarn where it needs to be, and make your stitches nice and neat, and as even as humanly possible. Rarer still is one video where I saw a lady knitting knit stitches on the back side of her needles and doing her pearls on the front stick in her needle in very directly into the right-hand side and drawing the yarn back through in a very simple direct manner. This one I saw on the day that I had decided "what is all of this rigmarole and twisting about when you could just put the yarn where you want it to be and drag it through?", and did so. I must have seen a video like it or even this video. I know better now, than to think that when I thought I had invented a new crochet stitch, that there is probably nothing new under the sun where it concerns any fiber art, So I will just say that I don't know what this type of knitting is called but it is similar to videos I have only recently began to watch about more specific things in knitting such as "how to purl ...Continental... English... Russian..." , or the easiest way to purl, how to knit faster, speed knitting, just every kind to see if I could learn some sort of trick or two that the pros have that was take me forever to learn because I don't speak "Knittinese"! Did you know that there is a proper and specific way to cast on for nearly every pattern design you'll ever want to do? There is even a knitted picot cast on! It took me years of watching knitting videos to even find that out or for it to even come up in my queue! Oh gosh how I have run on! The Bible does say, that "from the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks forth". Well, I am just very excited about learning how to knit, because these ladies who either don't have any speaking at all in their demonstrative videos, or are speaking another language that can simply be turned down, are very very good at showing every step at good close range without their fingers in the way, They do a step very slowly and when something is important they will point it out with their finger or with other hand gestures to point out that you want to watch it at this step and they will even demonstrate "do this, don't do that" by pointing or with a waggle of a finger... it is just awesome I have learned more by not hearing anything then I have learned from the English speakers who talk a lot and sometimes who talk a lot about stuff that doesn't have anything to do with the knitting that they're showing us which is distracting and even confusing, or in the tutorial they are speaking of something that we as beginners have never seen and do not understand the comparison of and that is very defeating and I turn them off. This style of knitting that I do may be put together of the many ways that I have seen and it changes the orientation of which leg is forward on the knitting needle from right forward to left forward with each pass/row. But unlike combination knitting you do not have to change the way you enter the stitch to make the back side of the stitch according to the Eastern or Western orientation. Did you know that besides all of the other types of knitting there is Eastern and Western as well? I have only recently which is really cool because I figured out this way of knitting and then I found a one in a million video that shows what I do and it is like their Russian grandma does! Is there something called Russian knitting I've seen some Russians knitting but it's not like that grandma. Should I call it Russian grandma knitting? Now, are you hearing that song in your head, that goes " ...ain't nuthin' gonna break-a my stride. Nobody's gonna slow me do-owwn, oh no! I got ta keep on movin'..."? I am. Have a listen... th-cam.com/video/F8pL7a0Qzjs/w-d-xo.htmlsi=bb5U0KzHOlN3Aix8 g , by the way, the girl mentioned in the song would be any other way of knitting than the way I have discovered for now. I will build my skills as time goes on.

  • @nanobrad
    @nanobrad 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I didn't realize the Gleener was effectively a little strip of sandpaper. Seems a little over priced for sandpaper. The sweater pumice is only $7 on Amazon vs $20 for the Gleener. I have a linen brush from the dollar store that work pretty well. The nicer linen brushes include a little more padding under the brush to better conform to the fabric--the dollar store one is a bit flat.

  • @sandyk378
    @sandyk378 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm going to try this style of knitting to go faster for my baby blanket. Thank you for your excellent teaching tutorial 😊

    • @TechyeFox
      @TechyeFox ปีที่แล้ว

      You’re welcome. Hope it helps.

  • @TechyeFox
    @TechyeFox 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks to some constructive comments made about how this video has my hands going off-screen and how I was knitting too fast for showing off how Continental Lever knitting purling does, I'll be making a shorter how-to video in the coming days to address these concerns. Thank you for watching this video and please subscribe and be on the lookout for the video that I'll be doing that is solely a how-to on Continental Lever Knitting.